Reaching the protein folding speed limit with large, sub-microsecond pressure jumps
- PMID: 19483692
- DOI: 10.1038/nmeth.1336
Reaching the protein folding speed limit with large, sub-microsecond pressure jumps
Abstract
Biomolecules are highly pressure-sensitive, but their dynamics upon return to ambient pressure are often too fast to observe with existing approaches. We describe a sample-efficient method capable of large and very fast pressure drops (<1 nanomole, >2,500 atmospheres and <0.7 microseconds). We validated the method by fluorescence-detected refolding of a genetically engineered lambda repressor mutant from its pressure-denatured state. We resolved barrierless structure formation upon return to ambient pressure; we observed a 2.1 +/- 0.7 microsecond refolding time, which is very close to the 'speed limit' for proteins and much faster than the corresponding temperature-jump refolding of the same protein. The ability to experimentally perform a large and very fast pressure drop opens up a new region of the biomolecular energy landscape for atomic-level simulation.
Comment in
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Downhill protein folding under pressure.Nat Methods. 2009 Jul;6(7):490-1. doi: 10.1038/nmeth0709-490. Nat Methods. 2009. PMID: 19564849 No abstract available.
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